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  1. Pentagrams and Paradoxes.Piotr Badzia̧g, Ingemar Bengtsson, Adán Cabello, Helena Granström & Jan-Åke Larsson - 2011 - Foundations of Physics 41 (3):414-423.
    Klyachko and coworkers consider an orthogonality graph in the form of a pentagram, and in this way derive a Kochen-Specker inequality for spin 1 systems. In some low-dimensional situations Hilbert spaces are naturally organised, by a magical choice of basis, into SO(N) orbits. Combining these ideas some very elegant results emerge. We give a careful discussion of the pentagram operator, and then show how the pentagram underlies a number of other quantum “paradoxes”, such as that of Hardy.
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  2.  16
    The frame potential, on average.Ingemar Bengtsson & Helena Granström - 2009 - In Krzysztof Stefanski (ed.), Open Systems and Information Dynamics. World scientific publishing company. pp. 16--02.
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    Turing’s man: a dialogue. [REVIEW]Helena Granström & Bo Göranzon - 2013 - AI and Society 28 (1):21-25.
    soft servants of durable material: they live without pretension in complicated relays and electrical circuits. Speed, docility are their strength. One asks: “What is 2 × 2?”—“Are you a machine?” They answer or refuse to answer, depending on what you demand. There are, however, other machines as well, more abstract automatons, bolder and more inaccessible, which eat their tape in mathematical formulae. They imitate in language. In infinite loops, farther and farther back in their retreat towards more subtle algorithms, more (...)
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